Drug use in coast up as West-bound heroin flows through
News
By
Reuters
| Jul 04, 2018
Heroin use is increasing in Kenya’s coastal communities as international traffickers use them as a transit point for drugs bound from Afghanistan to the West, creating health and social problems, a European Union-funded report said on Tuesday.
The port cities of Mombasa, Malindi and Lamu have been particularly hard hit in recent years, it said.
Health risks include contracting HIV and Hepatitis C, according to a senior analyst on the research team, Simone Haysom.
Drug users were also becoming marginalized in their communities. In Mombasa, some people accused of drug use had been stoned, burned or murdered in mob attacks, he said.
READ MORE
Kenya's Saba Saba protest tradition
Why civil society wants Kenya's Sh13 trillion debt discussed at dinner tables
Glock pistol, laptop stolen from businessman in Nairobi
Boost for Gor as fan initiative targets Champions League campaign
Prisons detain champions Pipeline to take lead in title race
Asharami to breakground on KPRL, gas terminal in October
KICD yet to pay publishers Sh9b over textbook policy gap as Grade 11 rollout nears
Super pollutant reduction will be Africa's next climate frontier
The growing drug problem was also denting the image of a region better known as a tourist destination for its sun and beaches.
The research was based on hundreds of interviews conducted in East and Southern Africa but it did not include figures showing the scale of the increase in drug use.
Researcher Ciara Aucoin said the region’s high youth unemployment made it particularly susceptible to drug abuse and its attendant crime.
“That combination of poverty, youth bulge, and unemployment leads to this powderkeg...in terms of drugs and violence,” Aucoin said.